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"My cousin, he is a hero--as I told you before."
"But you think him base," she cried quickly.
"I let the facts speak for me," he shrugged.
"Do they condemn him--absolutely? I think not."
She was a creature of impulse, too fine of spirit to be controlled by the caution of speech that convention demands. She would do justice to her foe, no matter how Manuel interpreted it.
What the young man did think was that she was the most adorable and desirable of earth's dwellers, the woman he must win at all hazards.
"He came here a spy, under a false name. Surely you do not forget that, Valencia," he said.
"I do not forget, either, that we flung his explanations in his face; refused him the common justice of a hearing. Had we given him a chance, all might have been well."
"My cousin is generous," Manuel smiled bitterly.
"I would be just."
"Be both, my beloved, to poor Manuel Pesquiera, an unhappy wreck on the ocean of love, seeking in vain for the harbor."
"There are many harbors, Manuel, for the brave sailor. If one is closed, another is open. He hoists sail, and beats across the main to another port."
"For some. But there are others who will to one port or none. I am of those."
When she left him it was with the feeling that Don Manuel would be hard hit, if she found herself unable to respond to his love.
He was not like this American, competent, energetic, full of the turbulent life of a new nation which turns easily from defeat to fresh victory.
Her heart was full of sympathy, and even pity, for him. But these are only akin to love.
It was not long before Valencia began to suspect that she had not been told the whole truth about the affair of the outlaw horse. There was some air of mystery, of expectation, among her _vaqueros_.
At her approach, conversation became suspended, and perceptibly shifted to other topics. Moreover, Pedro was troubled in his mind, out of all proportion to the extent of his wound.
She knew it would be no use to question him; but she made occasion soon to send for Juan Gardiez, the lad who had driven him home.
From the doorway of the living-room, Juan presently ducked a bow at her.
"The _senorita_ sent for me?"
"Yes. Come in, Juan. Take that chair."
Now, though Juan had often sat down in the kitchen, he had never before been invited to seat himself in this room. Wherefore, the warm smile that now met him, and went with the invitation, filled him with a more than mild surprise. Gingerly he perched himself on the edge of a chair, twirling his dusty sombrero round and round as a relief to his embarra.s.sment.
"I am sorry, Juan, that you don't like me or trust me any longer," his mistress began.
"But, _dona_, I do," exclaimed the boy, nearly falling from his chair in amazement.
She shook her head.
"No; I can see you don't. None of you do. You keep secrets from me. You whisper and hide things."
"But, no, _senorita_----"
"Yes. I can see it plainly. My people do not love me. I must go away from them, since----"
Juan, having in his tender boyish heart a great love for his _dona_, could not stand this.
"No, no, no, _senorita_! It is not so. I do a.s.sure you it is a mistake.
There is nothing about the cattle, nothing about the sheep you do not know. It is all told--all."
"_Muy bien_. Yet you conceal what happened yesterday to Pedro."
"He was thrown----"
She stopped him with a gesture.
"I don't want to know that again. Tell me what is in the air; what is planned for Senor Gordon; what Pedro has to do with it? Tell me, or leave me to know my people no longer love me."
The boy shook his head and let his eyes fall before her clear gaze.
"I can tell nothing."
"Look at me, Juan," she commanded, and waited till he obeyed. "Pedro it was that shot at this man Gordon. Is it not so?"
His eyes grew wide.
"Some one has told?" he said questioningly.
"No matter. It was he. Yesterday the American saved his life. Surely Pedro does not still----"
She did not finish in words, but her eyes chiseled into his stolid will to keep silent.
"The stranger invites evil. He would rob the _senorita_ and us all. He has said he would horsewhip Pedro. He rides up and down the valley, taunting us with his laugh. Is he a G.o.d, and are we slaves?"
"He said he would horsewhip Pedro, did he?"
"_Si senorita_; when Pedro told him to take his life, since it was his."
"And this was after Pedro had been thrown?"
"Directly after. The American is a devil, _dona_. He rode that man-killer like Satan. Did he not already know that it was Pedro who shot at him? Is not Pedro a sure shot, and did he not miss twice? Twice, _senorita_; which makes it certain that this _Senor_ Gordon is a devil."
"Don't talk nonsense, Juan. I want to know how he came to tell Pedro that he would whip him."
"He came up to the piazza when he had broken the heart of that other devil, the man-killer, and Pedro was sitting there. Then Pedro told him that he was the one who had shot at him, but he only laughed. He always laughs, this fiend. He knew it already, just as he knows everything.
Then it was he said he had saved the boy to whip him."